At the outset of The Killer Elite (1975), Mike and George appear to be two happy-go-lucky mercenaries that work for a CIA contractor. That changes when George (Robert Duvall) kills a defector they're protecting--then shoots Mike (James Caan) in the knee and elbow. As George stands over his bleeding pal, he states flatly: "(You) just retired. Enjoy it."
As Mike recovers from extensive surgery, his two bosses (Arthur Hill and Gig Young) visit him to deliver good news and bad news. The good is that he will receive $1500 in disability a month (a tidy sum compared to government employees). The bad news: "Given a year, maybe you'll be able to walk up a flight of stairs. That leg of yours will never be anything but a wet noodle."
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| George (Duvall) and Mike (Caan) prior to Mike's "retirement."  | 
Unlike most of his films, Sam Peckinpah was not involved with The Killer Elite from the beginning. He joined it when his plans for a thriller called The Insurance Company hit a snag. In fact, in the book Peckinpah, author Garner Simmons includes this telegram sent by studio executive Mike Medavoy to Peckinpah: "I am confirming to you, per your note of January 27th that you are not to do any writing on the script."
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| The Japanese poster emphasized the kung fu!  | 
Given his lack of involvement in the script, it's surprising that The Killer Elite comes across as a typical Peckinpah film. In fact, it works as a thematic sequel (of sorts) to my favorite Peckinpah movie: The Ballad of Cable Hogue (1970). In both films, the protagonists are betrayed by a friend (or friends) and left to die (one could argue that Mike "dies" when his profession is apparently taken away from him). And both films focus on the rehabilitation and, ultimately, reinvention of their protagonists. In the concluding scene of The Killer Elite, it's obvious that Mike has undergone a life-changing transformation.
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| Director Sam Peckinpah. | 







Not normally a Peckinpah fan, but this one has MEMORIES attached.
ReplyDeleteDuvall and Caan in another picture together ain't nothing to sneeze at!
It's that final scene between Caan and Duvall that makes the movie for me.
DeleteThe 70's...what a decade. It's interesting that the workaday actors from then became the top tier of the later decades. Duvall, in the 70's was a second-stringer of sorts, but he became the Laurence Olivier of later US film. Caan seemed to go down a notch in his later career.
DeleteI Like this one for the great Bo Hopkins. American Motors gets some screen time featuring it's new for 1975 'Pacer',featured in Burt Young's speed shop garage and on a bullet riddled billboard during a gun battle.
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